"This book must rank as the most devastating analysis of socialism yet penned.... An economic classic in our time."
-Henry Hazlitt
More than thirty years ago F. A. Hayek said of Socialism: "It was a work on political economy in the tradition of the great moral philosophers, a Montesquieu or Adam Smith, containing both acute knowledge and profound wisdom.... To none of us young men who read the book when it appeared was the world ever the same again."
This is a newly annotated edition of the classic first published in German in 1922. It is the definitive refutation of nearly every type of socialism ever devised. Mises presents a wide-ranging analysis of society, comparing the results of socialist planning with those of free-market capitalism in all areas of life.
Friedrich Hayek's foreword comments on the continuing relevance of this great work: "Most readers today will find that Socialism has more immediate application to contemporary events than it had when it first appeared.
Author(s): Ludwig von Mises
Series: Liberty Classics
Edition: 4
Publisher: Liberty Fund, Inc.
Year: 1981
Language: English
Pages: 572
City: Indianapolis
PUBLISHER’S PREFACE
FOREWORD BY F.A. HAYEK
PREFACE TO THE SECOND ENGLISH EDITION (1951)
TRANSLATOR’S NOTE (1936)
PREFACE TO THE SECOND GERMAN EDITION (1932)
INTRODUCTION
1: The Success of Socialist Ideas
2: The Scientific Analysis of Socialism
3: Alternative Modes of Approach to the Analysis of Socialism
PART I: LIBERALISM AND SOCIALISM
CHAPTER 1: Ownership
1: The Nature of Ownership
2: Violence and Contract
3: The Theory of Violence and the Theory of Contract
4: Collective Ownership of the Means of Production
5: Theories of the Evolution of Property
CHAPTER 2: Socialism
1: The State and Economic Activity
2: The “Fundamental Rights” of Socialist Theory
3: Collectivism and Socialism
CHAPTER 3: The Social Order and the Political Constitution
1: The Policy of Violence and the Policy of Contract
2: The Social Function of Democracy
3: The Ideal of Equality
4: Democracy and Social-Democracy
5: The Political Constitution of Socialist Communities
CHAPTER 4: The Social Order and the Family
1: Socialism and the Sexual Problem
2: Man and Woman in the Age of Violence
3: Marriage Under the Influence of the Idea of Contract
4: The Problems of Married Life
5: Free Love
6: Prostitution
PART II: THE ECONOMICS OF A SOCIALIST COMMUNITY
Section I.: The Economics of an Isolated Socialist Community
CHAPTER 5: The Nature of Economic Activity
1: A Contribution to the Critique of the Concept “Economic Activity”
2: Rational Action
3: Economic Calculation
4: The Capitalist Economy
5: The Narrower Concept of the “Economic”
CHAPTER 6: The Organization of Production Under Socialism
1: The Socialization of the Means of Production
2: Economic Calculation in the Socialist Community
3: Recent Socialist Doctrines and the Problems of Economic Calculation
4: The Artificial Market as the Solution of the Problem of Economic Calculation
5: Profitability and Productivity
6: Gross and Net Product
CHAPTER 7: The Distribution of Income
1: The Nature of Distribution Under Liberalism and Socialism
2: The Social Dividend
3: The Principles of Distribution
4: The Process of Distribution
5: The Costs of Distribution
CHAPTER 8: The Socialist Community Under Stationary Conditions
1: Stationary Conditions
2: The Disutilities and Satisfactions of Labour
3: The “Joy of Labour”
4: The Stimulus to Labour
5: The Productivity of Labour
CHAPTER 9: The Position of the Individual Under Socialism
1: Selection of Personnel and Choice of Occupation
2: Art and Literature, Science and Journalism
3: Personal Liberty
CHAPTER 10: Socialism Under Dynamic Conditions
1: The Nature of the Dynamic Forces
2: Changes in Population
3: Changes in Demand
4: Changes in the Amount of Capital
5: The Element of Change in the Socialist Economy
6: Speculation
7: Joint Stock Companies and the Socialist Economy
CHAPTER 11: The Impracticability of Socialism
1: The Fundamental Problems of a Socialist Economy Under Conditions of Change
2: Attempted Solutions
3: Capitalism the Only Solution
Section II.: The Foreign Relations of a Socialist Community
CHAPTER 12: National Socialism and World Socialism
1: The Spatial Extent of the Socialist Community
2: Marxian Treatment of this Problem
3: Liberalism and the Problem of the Frontiers
CHAPTER 13: The Problem of Migration Under Socialism
1: Migration and Differences in National Conditions
2: The Tendency Towards Decentralization Under Socialism
CHAPTER 14: Foreign Trade Under Socialism
1: Autarky and Socialism
2: Foreign Trade Under Socialism
3: Foreign Investment
Section III.: Particular Forms of Socialism and Pseudo-Socialism
CHAPTER 15: Particular Forms of Socialism
1: The Nature of Socialism
2: State Socialism
3: Military Socialism
4: Christian Socialism
5: The Planned Economy
6: Guild Socialism
CHAPTER 16: Pseudo-Socialist Systems
1: Solidarism
2: Various Proposals for Expropriation
3: Profit-Sharing
4: Syndicalism
5: Partial Socialism
PART III: THE ALLEGED INEVITABILITY OF SOCIALISM
Section I.: Social Evolution
CHAPTER 17: Socialistic Chiliasm
1: The Origin of Chiliasm
2: Chiliasm and Social Theory
CHAPTER 18: Society
1: The Nature of Society
2: The Division of Labour as the Principle of Social Development
3: Organism and Organization
4: The Individual and Society
5: The Development of the Division of Labour
6: Changes in the Individual in Society
7: Social Regression
8: Private Property and Social Evolution
CHAPTER 19: Conflict as a Factor in Social Evolution
1: The Cause of Social Evolution
2: Darwinism
3: Conflict and Competition
4: National War
5: Racial War
CHAPTER 20: The Clash of Class Interests and the Class War
1: The Concept of Class and of Class Conflict
2: Estates and Classes
3: Class War
4: The Forms of Class War
5: Class War as a Factor in Social Evolution
6: The Theory of the Class War and the Interpretation of History
7: Summary
CHAPTER 21: The Materialist Conception of History
1: Thought and Being
2: Science and Socialism
3: The Psychological Presuppositions of Socialism
Section II.: The Concentration of Capital and the Formation of Monopolies as Preliminary Steps to Socialism
CHAPTER 22: The Problem
1: The Marxian Theory of Concentration
2: The Theory of Anti-Monopolistic Policy
CHAPTER 23: The Concentration of Establishments
1: The Concentration of Establishments as the Complement of the Division of Labour
2: The Optimal Size of Establishments in Primary Production and in Transport
3: The Optimal Size of Establishments in Manufacturing
CHAPTER 24: The Concentration of Enterprises
1: The Horizontal Concentration of Enterprises
2: The Vertical Concentration of Enterprises
CHAPTER 25: The Concentration of Fortunes
1: The Problem
2: The Foundation of Fortunes Outside the Market Economy
3: The Formation of Fortunes Within the Market Economy
4: The Theory of Increasing Poverty
CHAPTER 26: Monopoly and Its Effects
1: The Nature of Monopoly and its Significance for the Formation of Prices
2: The Economic Effects of Isolated Monopolies
3: The Limits of Monopoly Formation
4: The Significance of Monopoly in Primary Production
PART IV: SOCIALISM AS A MORAL IMPERATIVE
CHAPTER 27: Socialism and Ethics
1: The Socialist Attitude to Ethics
2: Eudaemonistic Ethics and Socialism
3: A Contribution to the Understanding of Eudaemonism
CHAPTER 28: Socialism as an Emanation of Asceticism
1: The Ascetic Point of View
2: Asceticism and Socialism
CHAPTER 29: Christianity and Socialism
1: Religion and Social Ethics
2: The Gospels as a Source of Christian Ethics
3: Primitive Christianity and Society
4: The Canon Law Prohibition of Interest
5: Christianity and Property
6: Christian Socialism
CHAPTER 30: Ethical Socialism, Especially That of the New Criticism
1: The Categorical Imperative as a Foundation for Socialism
2: The Duty of Work as a Foundation for Socialism
3: The Equality of Incomes as an Ethical Postulate
4: The Ethical-Aesthetic Condemnation of the Profit-Motive
5: The Cultural Achievements of Capitalism
CHAPTER 31: Economic Democracy
1: The Slogan “Economic Democracy”
2: The Consumer as the Deciding Factor in Production
3: Socialism as Expression of the Will of the Majority
CHAPTER 32: Capitalist Ethics
1: Capitalist Ethics and the Impracticability of Socialism
2: The Alleged Defects of Capitalist Ethics
PART V: DESTRUCTIONISM
CHAPTER 33: The Motive Powers of Destructionism
1: The Nature of Destructionism
2: Demagogy
3: The Destructionism of the Literati
CHAPTER 34: The Methods of Destructionism
1: The Means of Destructionism
2: Labour Legislation
3: Compulsory Social Insurance
4: Trade Unions
5: Unemployment Insurance
6: Socialization
7: Taxation
8: Inflation
9: Marxism and Destructionism
CHAPTER 35: Overcoming Destructionism
1: The “Interest” as an Obstacle to Destructionism
2: Violence and Authority
3: The Battle of Ideas
CONCLUSION THE HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF MODERN SOCIALISM
1: Socialism in History
2: The Crisis of Civilization
APPENDIX A CONTRIBUTION TO THE CRITIQUE OF ATTEMPTS TO CONSTRUCT A SYSTEM OF ECONOMIC CALCULATION FOR THE SOCIALIST COMMUNITY
EPILOGUE
Introductory Remarks
1: The Failure of Interventionism
2: The Dictatorial, Anti-Democratic and Socialist Character of Interventionism
3: Socialism and Communism
4: Russia’s Aggressiveness
5: Trotsky’s Heresy
6: The Liberation of the Demons
7: Fascism
8: Nazism
9: The Teachings of Soviet Experience
10: The Alleged Invitability of Socialism
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE